Tiffon Cognac – fjord of dreams

While many spirits have started to focus on smaller producers, there’s one area that is still very much focused on the giants: Cognac. In November last year, looking for something different, we visited one of the smaller producers: Cognac Tiffon.

Quietly maturing their Cognac in the traditional manner

Given the drastic change in attitude towards whisky over the past decade, it is somewhat surprising that French brandies – both Cognac, and her arcane sibling Armagnac – have not seen similar transformations in public perception. For many years, Cognac has had a similar image to Scotch, and both suffer from a hereditary case of hard-to-pronounce distillery or château names.

Fashion has a lot to do with this. While Scotch and American whiskies have achieved a cult status in style bars, Cognac is still heavily associated with rap music and celebrity endorsements. Great news for the multinationals, of course, but less so for the small guys who can only dream of product placement in a Hollywood blockbuster or swathes of shelf space in travel retail.

Today, Cognac is a divided industry: the big four (Courvoisier, Hennessy, Martell and Rémy Martin) account for 80% of all bottles sold globally, while the hundreds of other, smaller producers scrabble over the remaining 20%.

Tiffon’s archives are impressive

Cognac Tiffon is based in Jarnac, in the heart of Cognac country. One of only a few remaining family-owned outfits in Cognac, the company was founded in 1875 by Médéric Tiffon.

In 1913, Norwegian-born Sverre Braastad married Edith Rousseau, granddaughter of Médéric, and in 1946, he purchased Chateau de Triac, where he lived out his remarkable 100-year life. Today, the company is run by Sverre’s son Robert, and his grandsons Antoine, Richard and Jan. They own a distillery with 10 gas-fired alembics, which produce roughly 5,000hl of pure alcohol each year (Cognac rules only allow distillation to take place from the autumn harvest to 31 March the following year).

Thanks to their Norwegian heritage, Tiffon has always done well in Scandinavian markets, where it goes under the Braastad name. However, they have recently found their way to the UK; this is what we think of the core range:

Palate: Impressive depth and weight, with a slight cola-reduction creaminess to it.

Comment: This is stunning, and gives any big-name XO a run for its money. Incredibly, this 40yo-plus liquid keeps its youthfulness and beautiful balance between oak and eaux-de-vie. A real star of the Tiffon range.